This patch removes the --enable-oldest-abi configure option, which has
long been bitrotten (as reported in bug 6652). The principle of
removing this option was agreed in the thread starting at
<https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2013-07/msg00174.html>.
Tested for x86_64 and x86 that the installed shared libraries other
than libc.so are unchanged by this patch and that libc.so disassembly
and symbol versions are unchanged (debug info changes because of
changed line numbers in csu/version.c).
[BZ #6652]
* Makeconfig (soversions-default-setname): Remove variable.
($(common-objpfx)soversions.i): Don't pass default_setname to
soversions.awk.
* Makerules ($(common-objpfx)abi-versions.h): Don't pass
oldest_abi to abi-versions.awk.
* config.h.in (GLIBC_OLDEST_ABI): Remove macro undefine.
* config.make.in (oldest-abi): Remove variable.
* configure.ac (--enable-oldest-abi): Remove configure option.
* configure: Regenerated.
* csu/version.c (banner) [GLIBC_OLDEST_ABI]: Remove conditional
text.
* scripts/abi-versions.awk: Do not handle oldest_abi variable.
* scripts/soversions.awk: Do not handle default_setname variable.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/configure.ac: Do not handle oldest_abi
variable.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/configure: Regenerated.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/configure.ac: Do not handle oldest_abi
variable.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/configure: Regenerated.
This patch removes the first column (patterns matching configuration
names) from shlib-versions, leaving shlib-versions entry selection
based purely on sysdeps directories.
An implication of this removal is that the default for any non-Linux
ports using NPTL will be the same SONAMEs for NPTL libraries as for
Linux (as those defaults, previously limited to .*-.*-linux.*, are
left in nptl/shlib-versions and nptl_db/shlib-versions).
Special host_os handling in configure.ac that was purely for
shlib-versions is removed. (The host_os setting is still used for
libc-abis - see
<https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2014-01/msg00375.html> regarding
that - but no entries there are affected by this change.)
Tested on x86_64 and x86 that the installed shared libraries are
unchanged by this patch.
* scripts/soversions.awk: Do not handle configuration names.
* Makeconfig ($(common-objpfx)soversions.i): Do not pass cpu,
vendor and os variables to soversions.awk.
* configure.ac: Do not modify gnu-* host_os.
* configure: Regenerated
* shlib-versions: Remove first column with configuration names.
* nptl/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* nptl_db/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/hppa/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/m68k/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/hppa/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/ia64/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/m68k/coldfire/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc64/shlib-versions:
Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/s390/s390-64/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sh/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sparc/sparc32/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sparc/sparc64/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/tile/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/64/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/x32/shlib-versions: Likewise.
libidn/ChangeLog:
* shlib-versions: Remove first column with configuration names.
This patch makes
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc64/shlib-versions use %ifdef
conditionals around the different symbol version definitions for big
and little endian. (It doesn't actually change the host patterns used
for those definitions; the point is to make it possible to remove the
first column from shlib-versions by eliminating the last case where it
would be harmful for it to be treated as .*-.*-.*.) The conditional
is based on the ELFv1/ELFv2 distinction rather than BE/LE, since
that's what's already tested in configure and used for the ld.so
soname in the Makefiles. (Of course if BE ELFv2 were supported in
future, it would get new symbol versions and so need new
conditionals.)
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc64/configure.ac
(HAVE_ELFV2_ABI): AC_DEFINE in ELFv2 case.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc64/configure:
Regenerated.
* config.h.in (HAVE_ELFV2_ABI): New macro undefine.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc64/shlib-versions:
Condition symbol version definitions on [HAVE_ELFV2_ABI].
This patch moves OS-specific entries in the top-level shlib-versions
file to appropriate sysdeps directories. I left the entries in
nptl/shlib-versions and nptl_db/shlib-versions unchanged; I think it
can be for those doing non-Linux NPTL-using ports to figure out
whether those entries should actually be OS-independent or should move
to sysdeps.
Given these two patches, I think the only further change needed before
the first column of shlib-versions can be eliminated will be changing
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc64/shlib-versions to use %ifdef
to distinguish BE and LE configurations, instead of relying on the
powerpc64-.*-linux.* and powerpc.*le-.*-linux.* patterns.
Tested on x86_64 that the installed shared libraries are unchanged by
this patch.
* shlib-versions: Remove OS-specific entries. Moved to files in
sysdeps.
* sysdeps/mach/hurd/shlib-versions: New file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/shlib-versions: Likewise.
This patch eliminates another way in which ex-ports and non-ex-ports
architectures differ, by moving architecture-specific entries from the
top-level shlib-versions file and that in nptl/ to appropriate sysdeps
directories. As with my previous patch
<https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2014-06/msg00949.html>, I do not
change the regular expressions used; even where the present
expressions seem more general, I believe they are in fact specific to
the chosen sysdeps directory, because any port that matches the
expression but not the sysdeps directory does not currently exist, and
so would use different symbol versions if added in future (and an
intended goal of these changes is to eliminate the first column in
shlib-versions completely rather than having two different mechanisms
in use for system-specific configuration).
Tested on x86_64 that this does not change the installed shared
libraries. (x86_64 of course does not provide much test coverage for
this patch - what should be architecture-specific contents in
shlib-versions for x86_64 is currently abi-*-ld-soname Makefile
settings, until gnu/lib-names.h is generated more like gnu/stubs.h so
those can move back to shlib-versions.)
* nptl/shlib-versions: Remove architecture-specific entries.
Moved to files in sysdeps.
* shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc64/shlib-versions: New
file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/s390/s390-64/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sh/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sparc/sparc32/shlib-versions: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sparc/sparc64/shlib-versions: Likewise.
Merge roland/nptl-hppa to master, update and test for hppa-linux-gnu.
This commit squashes and commits the work done by Roland McGrath on
roland/nptl-hppa to migrate hppa to the new non-addon NPTL. Some
additional tweaks were required for tcb-offsets.sym to work correctly
along with clone.S (unique to hppa).
In my powerpc32 testing I've observed misc/test-gettimebasefreq
failing.
This is a glibc build (soft-float, though that's not relevant here)
without any --with-cpu and without any special configuration of the
default CPU for GCC either. In particular, it's one not using
sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power4/hp-timing.h (although in fact the
processor I'm using for testing is POWER4-based), so hp_timing_t is
32-bit not 64-bit. But the VDSO call being used by
INTERNAL_VSYSCALL_NO_SYSCALL_FALLBACK is generating a 64-bit result
(high part in r3, low part in r4). The code extracting that result,
however, expects a result of the type hp_timing_t as passed to
INTERNAL_VSYSCALL_NO_SYSCALL_FALLBACK, meaning that only r3 (= 0) is
used and the value in r4 is ignored. This patch fixes this by always
using uint64_t as the type in INTERNAL_VSYSCALL_NO_SYSCALL_FALLBACK -
reflecting the actual ABI (unconditional in the kernel) of that VDSO
call. This is the minimal change for this issue - no check for
overflow, no change of the type of the timebase_freq variable or the
return type of __get_clockfreq to something other than hp_timing_t
(such a change would simply move the implicit conversions to the over
callers of that function), no change to hp_timing_t itself.
Tested for powerpc32 soft float.
[BZ #17263]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/get_clockfreq.c: Include
<stdint.h>.
(__get_clockfreq): Use uint64_t instead of hp_timing_t in
INTERNAL_VSYSCALL_NO_SYSCALL_FALLBACK call.
This patch fixes the incorrect guard by __USE_MISC of struct winsize and
struct termio in powerpc termios header. Current states leads to build
failures if the program defines _XOPEN_SOURCE, but not _DEFAULT_SOURCE
or either _BSD_SOURCE or _SVID_SOURCE. Without any definition,
__USE_MISC will not be defined and neither the struct definitions.
This patch copies the default Linux ioctl-types.h by adjusting only the
character control field (c_cc) size in struct termio.
Use the SSI_IEEE_RAISE_EXCEPTION function as from feraiseexcept,
instead of __ieee_get+set_fp_status. Always raise the FP exceptions
from float-to-integer conversion.
Remove lowlevellock.h in favour of the generic implementation. The
generic implementation was tested natively and introduces no
regressions.
ChangeLog:
2014-08-04 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/lowlevellock.h: Remove
file.
The previous set of not-cancel.h headers (prior to the commit
2fbdf5339a) did not require the
arch to define nocancel entry points, so ia64 never did.
However, after the various files were merged, it became a hard
requirement for arches which mean ia64 failed to build.
Here we add dedicated entry points. It'd be nice to merge
with the existing stubs like other arches do, but the ia64
asm does not lend itself to interleaving of functions. If
someone has a suggestion on merging these, that'd be great,
but at least now we build & pass tests again.
Open file description locks have been merged into the Linux kernel for
v3.15. Add the appropriate command-value definitions and an update to
the manual that describes their usage.
This patch splits s390 out of the main Linux kernel-features.h.
Not tested.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/s390/kernel-features.h: New file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/kernel-features.h [__s390__]
(__ASSUME_SOCKETCALL): Do not define.
This patch splits sh out of the main Linux kernel-features.h.
Not tested.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sh/kernel-features.h: New file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/kernel-features.h [__sh__]
(__ASSUME_SOCKETCALL): Do not define.
(__ASSUME_ST_INO_64_BIT): Define unconditionally.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020625 && __sh__]
(__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL): Do not define.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020625 && __sh__]
(__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL): Likewise.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x030000 && __sh__]
(__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL): Likewise.
[__sh__] (__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL_WITH_SOCKETCALL): Likewise.
This patch splits powerpc out of the main Linux kernel-features.h.
Not tested.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/kernel-features.h: New file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/kernel-features.h [__powerpc__]
(__ASSUME_SOCKETCALL): Do not define.
(__ASSUME_IPC64): Define unconditionally.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020625 && __powerpc__]
(__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL): Do not define.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020625 && __powerpc__]
(__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL): Likewise.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x030000 && __powerpc__]
(__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL): Likewise.
[__powerpc__] (__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL_WITH_SOCKETCALL):
Likewise.
This patch splits sparc out of the main Linux kernel-features.h.
Not tested.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sparc/kernel-features.h: New file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/kernel-features.h [__sparc__]
(__ASSUME_SOCKETCALL): Do not define.
(__ASSUME_SET_ROBUST_LIST): Define unconditionally.
(__ASSUME_FUTEX_LOCK_PI): Likewise.
[__sparc__] (__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL): Do not define.
[__sparc__] (__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL_WITH_SOCKETCALL): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_REQUEUE_PI): Define unconditionally.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020621 && __sparc__]
(__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL): Do not define.
[__sparc__] (__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL_WITH_SOCKETCALL): Likewise.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x030000 && __sparc__]
(__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL): Likewise.
[__sparc__] (__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL_WITH_SOCKETCALL): Likewise.
This patch splits i386 out of the main Linux kernel-features.h.
Tested x86 that there are no changes to disassembly of installed
shared libraries.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/i386/kernel-features.h: New file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/kernel-features.h [__i386__]
(__ASSUME_SOCKETCALL): Do not define.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020621 && __i386__]
(__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL): Likewise.
[__i386__] (__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL_WITH_SOCKETCALL): Likewise.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x030000 && __i386__]
(__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL): Likewise.
[__i386__] (__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL_WITH_SOCKETCALL): Likewise.
This patch splits x86_64 out of the main Linux kernel-features.h.
Tested x86_64 that there are no changes to disassembly of installed
shared libraries.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/kernel-features.h: New file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/kernel-features.h [__x86_64__]
(__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL): Do not define.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020621 && __x86_64__]
(__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL): Likewise.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x030000 && __x86_64__]
(__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL): Likewise.
[__x86_64__ && __LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x030100]
(__ASSUME_GETCPU_SYSCALL): Likewise.
This patch continues removing architecture-specific cases from
non-architecture-specific files by moving the logic to use directories
such as /lib64 out of sysdeps/gnu/configure.ac.
A new macro LIBC_SLIBDIR_RTLDDIR is created that sysdeps configure
scripts can use to declare the library directories to be used; the
logic was previously duplicated in configure fragments for aarch64,
mips and x32 as well as in sysdeps/gnu/configure.ac. This macro is
used directly in sysdeps/gnu/configure.ac only to provide the /lib
default (the logic saying that with --prefix=/usr shared libraries go
in /lib not /usr/lib); the architecture cases formerly there are moved
into various new or existing configure.ac files. The new macro is
also used in the various architecture fragments that already had such
logic. In the x32 there was previously a configure fragment, but it
was a directly written one without a .ac file; now a .ac file is used
there instead to generate configure.
Tested x86_64 that the installed shared libraries, and the directory
structure of the installation, are unchanged by this patch.
There is an old bug report - bug 6441 - about library directories
changing after reconfiguring. If this is still applicable - and I
haven't attempted to confirm it or review the old patch pointed to in
that bug - then this patch should reduce the number of places needing
changing in any fix.
* aclocal.m4 (LIBC_SLIBDIR_RTLDDIR): New macro.
* sysdeps/gnu/configure.ac: Use LIBC_SLIBDIR_RTLDDIR. Remove
cases for individual architectures.
* sysdeps/gnu/configure: Regenerated.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/configure.ac: Use
LIBC_SLIBDIR_RTLDDIR.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/configure: Regenerated.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/configure.ac: Use
LIBC_SLIBDIR_RTLDDIR.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/configure: Regenerated.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc64/configure.ac: Use
LIBC_SLIBDIR_RTLDDIR.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc64/configure:
Regenerated.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/s390/s390-64/configure.ac: New file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/s390/s390-64/configure: New generated
file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sparc/sparc64/configure.ac: New file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sparc/sparc64/configure: New generated
file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/64/configure.ac: New file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/64/configure: New generated file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/x32/configure.ac: New file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/x32/configure: Generate.
Various architectures have files such as sysdeps/<arch>/shlib-versions
whose contents are in fact entirely Linux-specific, relating only to
the symbol / shared library versions for the port to Linux on that
architecture, when any future port to a different OS on that
architecture would use the symbol version of the glibc release it goes
in, as standard for new ports.
This patch moves such files under sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/, merging in
the contents of sysdeps/<arch>/nptl/shlib-versions in the process.
The only bits not moved are those relating to libgcc_s versions, which
don't appear OS-specific in the same way that glibc's symbol versions
so. It deliberately does not change the regular expressions given for
matching configurations in each file; some match only Linux although
not Linux-specific, or match other OSes although Linux-specific. It
is with a view to at least the following further cleanups:
* Move architecture-specific content from the toplevel shlib-versions
and nptl/shlib-versions into sysdeps shlib-versions files, so
eliminating another difference between ex-ports and non-ex-ports
architectures.
* Likewise, for OS-specific content in shlib-versions files.
* At that point, the first field in shlib-versions files (the regular
expression matching a configuration triplet) should be redundant, so
eliminate that field and leave shlib-versions selection working
purely on a sysdeps basis (with limited use of %ifdef in
shlib-versions files when needed) rather than having its own
separate mechanism to select what configuration information is
relevant.
* Move the build of gnu/lib-names.h to a similar mechanism to that
used for gnu/stubs.h (each library build installing a version of the
header specifically for that build), so we can eliminate the
duplication of soname information in the makefiles and get it purely
from shlib-versions files again.
There may be other cleanups possible as well (in particular, I'm not
sure that all cases where the same "Earliest symbol set" information
is repeated for many different libraries actually should need to
repeat it rather than specifying it just once for DEFAULT for the
given configuration, and separately specifying any non-default choices
of soname).
Tested x86_64 that the installed shared libraries are unchanged by
this patch.
* sysdeps/aarch64/shlib-versions: Move to ...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/shlib-versions: ... here.
* sysdeps/alpha/shlib-versions: Move to ...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha/shlib-versions: ... here.
* sysdeps/arm/shlib-versions: Move to ...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/shlib-versions: ... here.
* sysdeps/hppa/shlib-versions: Move all contents except for
libgcc_s entry to ...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/hppa/shlib-versions: ... here. Merge in
entry from ...
* sysdeps/hppa/nptl/shlib-versions: ... here. Remove file.
* sysdeps/ia64/shlib-versions: Move to ...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/ia64/shlib-versions: ... here. Merge in
entry from ...
* sysdeps/ia64/nptl/shlib-versions: ... here. Remove file.
* sysdeps/m68k/coldfire/shlib-versions: Move to ...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/m68k/coldfire/shlib-versions: ... here.
* sysdeps/microblaze/shlib-versions: Move to ...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/shlib-versions: ... here.
* sysdeps/mips/shlib-versions: Move to ...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/shlib-versions: ... here. Merge in
entry from ...
* sysdeps/mips/nptl/shlib-versions: ... here. Remove file.
* sysdeps/tile/shlib-versions: Move to ...
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/tile/shlib-versions: ... here.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/64/shlib-versions: Merge in entry
from ...
* sysdeps/x86_64/64/shlib-versions: ... here. Remove file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/x32/shlib-versions: Merge in
entry from ...
* sysdeps/x86_64/x32/shlib-versions: ... here. Remove file.
Commit 887865f remove the lll_robust_trylock definition on all
architectures, however for powerpc both __lll_trylock and
__lll_cond_trylock were based on lll_robust_trylock definition.
This patch restore it with a different name.
Here's an updated patch to fix the crash in bug-ga2 when the system
has no configured ipv6 address. I have taken a different approach of
using libc_freeres_fn instead of the libc_freeres_ptr since the former
gives better control over what is freed; we need that since cache may
or may not be allocated using malloc.
Verified that bug-ga2 works correctly in both cases and does not have
memory leaks in either of them.
This commit removes the aio_cancel and aio_cancel64 symbols at
GLIBC_2.3 from the ABI baseline. The ABI baseline is now complete
for hppa and considered stable.
The following ABI baselines were tested against several old releases
of debian and gentoo. Several problems were discovered and fixed as
part of developing the ABI baselines.
Firstly, libBrokenLocale on gentoo exports __ctype_get_mb_cur_max
as @@GLIBC_2.0, but it should be @@GLIBC_2.2 since that's the minimum
version defined in shlib-versions for hppa. I don't know when this
broke, but master properly parses hppa's shlib-versions which clearly
lists libBrokenLocale as defaulting to GLIBC_2.2. Therefore I'm
accepting GLBIC_2.2 as the correct version for this symbol and setting
the baseline to that, despite the fact that the present distribution
is wrong. I don't expect that any new applications should be using
libBrokenLocale, so it should match the oldest behaviour which is to
export a GLIBC_2.2 symbol. For example in debian's 2.7 has it at
version GLIBC_2.2.
Secondly, aio_cancel and aio_cancel64 previously had a compat symbol
at version @GLIBC_2.1 with a new symbol at @@GLIBC_2.3[1]. During the
Linuxthreads to NPTL transition the file aio_cancel.c was lost for hppa
and that resulted in just @@GLIBC_2.1 versions of these symbols being
exported. The @@GLIBC_2.1 version works correctly and uses the right
value of ECANCELLED. Therefore if I were to fix this today it might
break correctly working applications using aio_cancel*@GLIBC_2.1 by
causing those to use the old aio_cancel that used the older value
of ECANCELLED. Thus the best option is to accept that the ABI changed
and ignore older applications in favour of newer applications. The
best thing to do is cleanup the version files (included in the patch).
The rest of the ABI was as expected (ignoring __p_type_syms size
change in 2008).
Now that the MicroBlaze 3.15 kernel has the pselect6, preadv and
pwritev syscalls, this patch updates kernel-features.h so they are
assumed to be present for 3.15 and later kernels.
2014-06-17 Joseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x030f00] (__ASSUME_PSELECT): Do not
undefine.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x030f00] (__ASSUME_PREADV): Likewise.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x030f00] (__ASSUME_PWRITEV): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: David Holsgrove <david.holsgrove@xilinx.com>
And update socket.S, Makefile to use *_nocancel definitions.
Absence of sysdep-cancel.h was not apparent until Roland's
not-cancel.h unification.
2014-06-30 David Holsgrove <david.holsgrove@xilinx.com>
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/sysdep-cancel.h: New file
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/socket.S: Update SINGLE_THREAD_P
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/Makefile: Add to libpthread-routines
Signed-off-by: David Holsgrove <david.holsgrove@xilinx.com>
The 64-bit MIPS ABIs involve the caller setting up t9 ($25) to the
address of the called function, and the called function then using
this in a .cpsetup directive to compute gp. The .cpsetup directive
needs to name the function to which t9 points for this purpose. In
the definition of *_nocancel functions, the directive pointed to the
normal entry point rather than the _nocancel one, resulting in
segfaults when the _nocancel functions were used. This patch corrects
the function name used in the directive. (It seems the bug was latent
until Roland's not-cancel.h unification, with the _nocancel entry
points not previously being used - so not user-visible in a release,
so no Bugzilla entry required.)
Tested mips64 sufficiently to confirm the previously seen segfaults
are fixed.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/mips64/nptl/sysdep-cancel.h
[__PIC__] (PSEUDO): Use name of _nocancel entry point in
corresponding .cpsetup call.
This patch removes conditionals on __ASSUME_O_CLOEXEC, and on
O_CLOEXEC being defined, in sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/, now that
O_CLOEXEC support can be unconditionally assumed.
The patch is conservative in what it changes and further followup
cleanups may be possible. It may be possible to remove dl-opendir.c,
but the patch does not do so, just removing a redundant undefine and
redefine of __ASSUME_O_CLOEXEC. Also, __ASSUME_O_CLOEXEC is defined
unconditionally for Hurd as well as Linux. Thus, if we decide that
O_CLOEXEC support is a required feature of any glibc port, we could
remove __ASSUME_O_CLOEXEC and all conditionals on it throughout glibc,
rather than just cleaning up sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/.
Tested x86_64 that the disassembly of installed shared libraries is
unchanged by this patch.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/dl-opendir.c (__ASSUME_O_CLOEXEC): Do
not undefine and redefine.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/getsysstats.c (__get_nprocs)
[O_CLOEXEC]: Make code unconditional.
(__get_nprocs) [!O_CLOEXEC]: Remove conditional code.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/shm_open.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
[O_CLOEXEC && !__ASSUME_O_CLOEXEC] (have_o_cloexec): Remove
conditional variable definition.
(shm_open) [O_CLOEXEC]: Make code unconditional.
(shm_open) [!O_CLOEXEC || !__ASSUME_O_CLOEXEC]: Remove conditional
code.
This patch removes the __ASSUME_XFS_RESTRICTED_CHOWN macro, now it can
be presumed to be defined unconditionally. I'm not sure if what's
left of __statfs_chown_restricted is actually useful (if not, a
followup could remove it), but I left it there to keep the patch
conservative and avoid changing the code generated for glibc.
Tested x86_64 that the disassembly of installed shared libraries is
unchanged by the patch.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_XFS_RESTRICTED_CHOWN): Remove macro.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/pathconf.c (__statfs_chown_restricted)
[__ASSUME_XFS_RESTRICTED_CHOWN]: Make code unconditional.
(__statfs_chown_restricted) [!__ASSUME_XFS_RESTRICTED_CHOWN]:
Remove conditional code.
Add support for the new HWCAP2 values for ARMv8 added in the
3.15 kernel. Tested using QEMU which supports these extensions.
ChangeLog:
2014-06-25 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/dl-procinfo.c
(_dl_arm_cap_flags): Add HWCAP2 values.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/dl-procinfo.h
(_DL_HWCAP_COUNT): Increase to 37.
(_DL_HWCAP_LAST): New define.
(_DL_HWCAP2_LAST): New define.
(_dl_procinfo): Add support for printing
AT_HWCAP2 entries.
(_dl_string_hwcap): Use _dl_hwcap_string.
This patch removes the __ASSUME_UTIMENSAT macro, now it can be
unconditionally assumed to be true.
This shows that the only live uses of __ASSUME_UTIMES are in utimes.c
and they are only live for hppa. I intend a followup patch to make
__ASSUME_UTIMES into an hppa-specific macro (not used or defined
outside sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/hppa/).
Tested x86_64 that the disassembly of installed shared libraries is
unchanged by this patch.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/kernel-features.h (__ASSUME_UTIMENSAT):
Remove macro.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/futimes.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
[__NR_utimensat && !__ASSUME_UTIMENSAT] (miss_utimensat): Remove
conditional variable definition.
(__futimes): Update comment.
(__futimes) [__ASSUME_UTIMENSAT]: Make code unconditional.
(__futimes) [!__ASSUME_UTIMENSAT]: Remove conditional code.
This patch removes the __ASSUME_COMPLETE_READV_WRITEV
kernel-features.h macro, now that it can be unconditionally assumed to
be true. (The relevant kernel feature was added some time between 2.0
and 2.2, and this macro is only used in sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/.)
Tested x86_64 that the disassembly of installed shared libraries is
unchanged by this patch.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_COMPLETE_READV_WRITEV): Remove macro.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/readv.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
[!__ASSUME_COMPLETE_READV_WRITEV]: Remove conditional code.
[!UIO_FASTIOV] (UIO_FASTIOV): Remove macro.
(__libc_readv) [__ASSUME_COMPLETE_READV_WRITEV]: Make code
unconditional.
(__libc_readv) [!__ASSUME_COMPLETE_READV_WRITEV]: Remove
conditional code.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/writev.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
[!__ASSUME_COMPLETE_READV_WRITEV]: Remove conditional code.
[!UIO_FASTIOV] (UIO_FASTIOV): Remove macro.
(__libc_writev) [__ASSUME_COMPLETE_READV_WRITEV]: Make code
unconditional.
(__libc_writev) [!__ASSUME_COMPLETE_READV_WRITEV]: Remove
conditional code.
Continuing the process of making non-ex-ports architectures follow the
preferred sysdeps practices followed by ex-ports architectures - that
is, putting things in architecture-specific sysdeps files rather than
having architecture-specific cases in architecture-independent files -
this patch moves architecture cases out of
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/configure.ac into (new or existing) configure
fragments for each architecture. (In the case of the
arch_minimum_kernel setting for x32,
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/x32/configure already has such a
setting so the setting in sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/configure.ac was a
duplicate that could just be removed - though I haven't tested for
x32.)
Tested for x86_64 and x86 that the patch causes no changes to the
installed shared libraries or ldd (or any part of the installation
except for the parts that always change because the files contain
timestamps - nscd and static libraries).
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/configure.ac: Remove cases for
individual architectures.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/configure: Regenerated.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/i386/configure.ac: New file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/i386/configure: New generated file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/configure.ac
(ldd_rewrite_script): Define variable.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/configure: Regenerated.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc32/configure.ac: New
file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/powerpc32/configure: New
generated file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/s390/configure.ac: New file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/s390/configure: New generated file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sh/configure.ac: New file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sh/configure: New generated file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sparc/configure.ac: New file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sparc/configure: New generated file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/configure.ac: New file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/configure: New generated file.
This patch updates glibc headers for changes / new definitions in
Linux 3.15. In the course of my review I noticed that
IPV6_PMTUDISC_INTERFACE was absent from glibc despite the inclusion of
IP_PMTUDISC_INTERFACE; I added it along with IP_PMTUDISC_OMIT and
IPV6_PMTUDISC_OMIT. I did not add FALLOC_FL_NO_HIDE_STALE given the
kernel header comment that it is reserved.
Tested x86_64.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/bits/fcntl-linux.h [__USE_GNU]
(FALLOC_FL_COLLAPSE_RANGE): New macro.
[__USE_GNU] (FALLOC_FL_ZERO_RANGE): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/bits/in.h (IP_PMTUDISC_OMIT): Likewise.
(IPV6_PMTUDISC_INTERFACE): Likewise.
(IPV6_PMTUDISC_OMIT): Likewise.
This patch removes ARM __ASSUME_SIGFRAME_V2 now that the
2.6.18-and-later signal frame layout can be assumed, renaming the
affected functions accordingly now only one version of them is needed
in glibc. (sigrestorer.S did not in fact include <kernel-features.h>
and it appears that, unlike other such cases, it didn't get the header
indirectly, so the v1 functions would have been compiled in even when
sigaction.c didn't reference them.)
(alpha and hppa also have architecture-specific __ASSUME_* macros that
should now be removed: __ASSUME_FDATASYNC and __ASSUME_LWS_CAS
respectively. I don't have any plans to do anything on that myself.)
Tested on ARM.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_SIGFRAME_V2): Remove macro.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/sigrestorer.S: Update comment.
[!__ASSUME_SIGFRAME_V2]: Remove conditional code.
(__default_sa_restorer_v2): Rename to __default_sa_restorer.
(__default_rt_sa_restorer_v2): Rename to __default_rt_sa_restorer.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/sigaction.c (__default_sa_restorer):
Declare as function. Remove conditional macro definitions.
(__default_rt_sa_restorer): Likewise.
(__default_sa_restorer_v1): Remove declaration.
(__default_sa_restorer_v2): Likewise.
(__default_rt_sa_restorer_v1): Likewise.
(__default_rt_sa_restorer_v2): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/Versions (GLIBC_PRIVATE): Remove
__default_sa_restorer_v1, __default_rt_sa_restorer_v1,
__default_sa_restorer_v2 and __default_rt_sa_restorer_v2.
This patch removes conditionals on __ASSUME_SOCK_CLOEXEC, and on
SOCK_CLOEXEC being defined, in Linux-specific code, now that all
supported Linux kernel versions can be assumed to have this
functionality. (The macro is also used in OS-independent code and is
not defined for Hurd.)
Tested x86_64 that the disassembly of installed shared libraries is
unchanged by this patch.
* nptl/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mq_notify.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
(init_mq_netlink): Remove conditional have_sock_cloexec
definitions. Remove code conditional on have_sock_cloexec < 0.
(init_mq_netlink) [!SOCK_CLOEXEC]: Remove conditional code.
(init_mq_netlink) [!__ASSUME_SOCK_CLOEXEC]: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/opensock.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
(__opensock) [SOCK_CLOEXEC]: Make code unconditional.
(__opensock) [!__ASSUME_SOCK_CLOEXEC]: Remove conditional code.
This patch removes __ASSUME_F_GETOWN_EX now it can be assumed to be
true unconditionally.
Tested x86_64 that disassembly of installed shared libraries is
unchanged by this patch.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_F_GETOWN_EX): Remove macro.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/fcntl.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
(miss_F_GETOWN_EX): Remove variable or macro.
(do_fcntl): Do not check miss_F_GETOWN_EX.
(do_fcntl) [!__ASSUME_F_GETOWN_EX]: Remove conditional code.
This patch removes __ASSUME_AT_RANDOM now it can be assumed to be true
unconditionally.
Tested x86_64 that the disassembly of installed shared libraries is
unchanged by this patch.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/kernel-features.h (__ASSUME_AT_RANDOM):
Remove macro.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/dl-osinfo.h (_dl_setup_stack_chk_guard)
[!__ASSUME_AT_RANDOM]: Remove conditional code.
(_dl_setup_pointer_guard) [!__ASSUME_AT_RANDOM]: Likewise.
This patch removes the __ASSUME_ADJ_OFFSET_SS_READ macro (and
conditionals on whether ADJ_OFFSET_SS_READ is defined), now it can be
unconditionally assumed to be true and ADJ_OFFSET_SS_READ can be
assumed to be defined.
Tested x86_64 that the disassembly of installed shared libraries is
unchanged by this patch.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_ADJ_OFFSET_SS_READ): Remove macro.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/adjtime.c (ADJTIME)
[ADJ_OFFSET_SS_READ]: Make code unconditional.
(ADJTIME) [!ADJ_OFFSET_SS_READ]: Remove conditional code.
This patch cleans up for __ASSUME_ATFCTS now always being true for the
supported Linux kernel versions by removing conditional code in
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux. Several fchownat.c files that were only
present because of differences in the fallback syscalls used
(depending on the architecture-specific names of chown-related
syscalls for 32-bit uids) are removed. Files that looks like they
could be replaced by syscalls.list entries have the standard "Consider
moving to syscalls.list." comment (see bug 14138) added. Conditionals
on the relevant __NR_* syscall numbers being defined are also removed,
since my analysis indicated that the relevant syscalls are always
defined for all relevant kernel versions using any affected file.
Much of the removed fallback code had unbounded stack allocations, so
this reduces the number of cases to consider for anyone reviewing uses
of alloca and VLAs in glibc.
There remain tests of __ASSUME_ATFCTS in io/openat.c (to determine
whether to define __have_atfcts) and sysdeps/posix/getcwd.c (which
also uses __have_atfcts); thus, the definition of __ASSUME_ATFCTS
remains in kernel-features.h. The logical condition relevant there is
whether openat64_not_cancel_3 is known to work. Hurd doesn't use this
version of getcwd at all, so the conditionals in getcwd.c are always
true in glibc. However, this code is also used in gnulib. So the
best way to deal with the conditionals there may be for gnulib people
to deal with merging all relevant changes in both directions between
the glibc and gnulib versions of this file, at the end of which the
openat conditionals should be in whatever form is best for gnulib, and
hardcoded in the _LIBC case to having openat supported.
Tested by comparing before-and-after disassembly of installed
(stripped) shared libraries, on x86_64 and x86. On x86 the patch made
no change to the disassembly; on x86_64, the only changes were in
readlinkat, where formerly the return value from the readlinkat
syscall was stored in an int variable before being converted to
ssize_t for the return, and now the return value is returned directly
without truncation to int. I think it's clearly correct not to
truncate the return value (although I also think the truncation would
not have been a user-visible bug because the kernel would never have
returned a value it could have affected).
* include/fcntl.h (__atfct_seterrno): Remove prototype.
(__atfct_seterrno_2): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha/dl-fxstatat64.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
(__ASSUME_ATFCTS): Do not undefine and redefine.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha/fxstatat.c [__ASSUME_ATFCTS]
(__have_atfcts): Remove conditional definition.
(__fxstatat([__NR_fstatat64]: Make code unconditional.
(__fxstatat) [!__ASSUME_ATFCTS]: Remove conditional code and code
unreachable if [__ASSUME_ATFCTS].
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/dl-fxstatat64.c (__ASSUME_ATFCTS): Do
not undefine and redefine.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/faccessat.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
(faccessat) [__NR_faccessat]: Make code unconditional.
(faccessat) [!__ASSUME_ATFCTS]: Remove conditional code.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/fchmodat.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
(fchmodat) [__NR_fchmodat]: Make code unconditional.
(fchmodat) [!__ASSUME_ATFCTS]: Remove conditional code.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/fchownat.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
(fchownat) [__NR_fchownat]: Make code unconditional.
(fchownat) [!__ASSUME_ATFCTS]: Remove conditional code.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/futimesat.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
(futimesat) [__NR_futimesat]: Make code unconditional.
(futimesat) [!__ASSUME_ATFCTS]: Remove conditional code.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/fxstatat.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
(__fxstatat) [__NR_newfstatat]: Make code unconditional.
(__fxstatat) [!__ASSUME_ATFCTS]: Remove conditional code.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/fxstatat64.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
(__fxstatat64) [__NR_fstatat64]: Make code unconditional.
(__fxstatat64) [!__ASSUME_ATFCTS]: Remove conditional code.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/i386/fchownat.c: Remove file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/i386/fxstatat.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
(__fxstatat) [__NR_fstatat64]: Make code unconditional.
(__fxstatat) [!__ASSUME_ATFCTS]: Remove conditional code.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/linkat.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
(linkat) [__NR_linkat]: Make code unconditional.
(linkat) [!__ASSUME_ATFCTS]: Remove conditional code.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/m68k/fchownat.c: Remove file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/mips64/fxstatat64.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
(__fxstatat64) [__NR_newfstatat]: Make code unconditional.
(__fxstatat64) [!__ASSUME_ATFCTS]: Remove conditional code.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mkdirat.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
(mkdirat) [__NR_mkdirat]: Make code unconditional.
(mkdirat) [!__ASSUME_ATFCTS]: Remove conditional code.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/openat.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
[!__ASSUME_ATFCTS] (__atfct_seterrno): Remove function.
[!__ASSUME_ATFCTS] (__have_atfcts): Remove variable.
(OPENAT_NOT_CANCEL) [__NR_openat]: Make code unconditional.
(OPENAT_NOT_CANCEL) [!__ASSUME_ATFCTS]: Remove conditional code.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/fchownat.c: Remove file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/readlinkat.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
(readlinkat) [__NR_readlinkat]: Make code unconditional.
(readlinkat) [!__ASSUME_ATFCTS]: Remove conditional code. Return
result of INLINE_SYSCALL directly, not via int variable.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/renameat.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
[!__ASSUME_ATFCTS] (__atfct_seterrno_2): Remove function.
(renameat) [__NR_renameat]: Make code unconditional.
(renameat) [!__ASSUME_ATFCTS]: Remove conditional code.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/s390/s390-32/fchownat.c: Remove file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sh/fchownat.c: Remove file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sparc/sparc32/fchownat.c: Remove file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sparc/sparc64/dl-fxstatat64.c
(__ASSUME_ATFCTS): Do not undefine and redefine.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/symlinkat.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
(symlinkat) [__NR_symlinkat]: Make code unconditional.
(symlinkat) [!__ASSUME_ATFCTS]: Remove conditional code.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/unlinkat.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
(unlinkat) [__NR_unlinkat]: Make code unconditional.
(unlinkat) [!__ASSUME_ATFCTS]: Remove conditional code.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/wordsize-64/dl-fxstatat64.c
(__ASSUME_ATFCTS): Do not undefine and redefine.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/wordsize-64/fxstatat.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
(__fxstatat) [__NR_newfstatat]: Make code unconditional.
(__fxstatat) [!__ASSUME_ATFCTS]: Remove conditional code.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/xmknodat.c: Do not include
<kernel-features.h>.
(__xmknodat) [__NR_mknodat]: Make code unconditional.
(__xmknodat) [!__ASSUME_ATFCTS]: Remove conditional code.
With the recent tuning the C version of rwlocks is basically the same
performance as the x86 assembler version for uncontended locks (with a
a few cycles near the run-to-run variability). For others it should not
matter anyways.
So remove the assembler code and use the C version like other
architectures.
This patch relies on the C version of the rwlocks posted earlier.
With C rwlocks it is very straight forward to do adaptive elision
using TSX. It is based on the infrastructure added earlier
for mutexes, but uses its own elision macros. The macros
are fairly general purpose and could be used for other
elision purposes too.
This version is much cleaner than the earlier assembler based
version, and in particular implements adaptation which makes
it safer.
I changed the behavior slightly to not require any changes
in the test suite and fully conform to all expected
behaviors (generally at the cost of not eliding in
various situations). In particular this means the timedlock
variants are not elided. Nested trylock aborts.
The implementation of __get_nprocs uses a stactic variable to cache
the value of the current number of processors. The caching breaks when
'time (NULL) == 0':
$ cat nproc.c
#include <stdio.h>
#include <time.h>
#include <sys/time.h>
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
time_t t;
struct timeval tv = {0, 0};
printf("settimeofday({0, 0}, NULL) = %d\n", settimeofday(&tv, NULL));
t = time(NULL);
printf("Time: %d, CPUs: %d\n", (unsigned int)t, get_nprocs());
return 0;
}
$ gcc -O3 nproc.c
$ ./a.out
settimeofday({0, 0}, NULL) = -1
Time: 1401311578, CPUs: 4
$ sudo ./a.out
settimeofday({0, 0}, NULL) = 0
Time: 0, CPUs: 0
The problem is with the condition used to check whether a cached
value should be returned or not:
static int cached_result;
static time_t timestamp;
time_t now = time (NULL);
time_t prev = timestamp;
atomic_read_barrier ();
if (now == prev)
return cached_result;
This patch fixes the problem by ensuring that 'cached_result' has
been set at least once before returning it.
The hppa port has no need of a custom lowlevellock.c, it should
use the generic version which is updated and correct. This
similarly fixes bug 15119 for hppa.
In several cases we've had asm routines rely on syscalls not clobbering
call-clobbered registers, and that's now deemed ABI. So take advantage
of this in the INLINE_SYSCALL path as well.
Shrinks libc.so by about 1k.
This macro was removed by
2005-11-16 Daniel Jacobowitz <dan@codesourcery.com>
but not applied to the (still separate) eabi port so necro'd
when the eabi port superceded the old abi. It was thence
copied into the new AArch64 port.
This also highlights that we'd been loading 64-bits instead of
the proper 32-bits. Caught by the linker as a relocation error,
since the variable happened to be unaligned for 64-bits.
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/unwind-resume.c and
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/unwind-forcedunwind.c have static
variables that are written in C code but only read from toplevel asms.
Current GCC trunk now optimizes away such apparently write-only static
variables, so causing a build failure. This patch marks those
variables with __attribute_used__ to avoid that optimization.
Tested that this fixes the build for ARM.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/unwind-forcedunwind.c
(libgcc_s_resume): Use __attribute_used__.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/unwind-resume.c (libgcc_s_resume):
Likewise.
Using the default header instead. This matches the kernel, which also
uses the generic header. Fixes the sys/wait.h conform issue, where
si_band had the wrong type.
The current code for nocancel syscalls does not do a comparison of
the system call return value. This leads to code being generated
where the b.cs follows the svc instruction directly without setting
the flags on which the branch depends.
ChangeLog:
2014-05-20 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/nptl/sysdep-cancel.h (PSEUDO):
Test the return value of the system call in the nocancel case.
This patch fixes an issue observed by the Xen project, where including
signal.h exposes various PSR_MODE #defines. This is due to the usage
in sys/user.h and sys/procfs.h of the struct user_pt_regs and
user_fpsimd_state included via asm/ptrace.h. The namespace pollution
this inclusion introduce is already partially fixed with some #undef
of the PTRACE_* symbols, but other symbols like the PSR_MODE ones are
still present, and undefining them is not safe since a user can
include ptrace.h before user.h.
My proposition is to define the 2 structures we need in user.h and get
rid of the asm/ptrace.h inclusion.
Build and make check are clean on AArch64.
2014-05-20 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
Yvan Roux <yvan.roux@linaro.org>
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/sys/user.h: Remove unused
#include of asm/ptrace.h.
(PTRACE_GET_THREAD_AREA): Remove #undef.
(PTRACE_GETHBPREGS): Likewise.
(PTRACE_SETHBPREGS): Likewise.
(struct user_regs_struct): New structure.
(struct user_fpsimd_struct): New structure.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/sys/procfs.h: Remove unused
#include of asm/ptrace.h and second #include of sys/user.h.
(PTRACE_GET_THREAD_AREA): Remove #undef.
(PTRACE_GETHBPREGS): Likewise.
(PTRACE_SETHBPREGS): Likewise.
(ELF_NGREG): Use new struct user_regs_struct.
(elf_fpregset_t): Use new struct user_fpsimd_struct.
This patch guard the BSD definition for terminal modes in PowerPC
specific header fixing the following conformance failures:
FAIL: conform/POSIX/termios.h/conform
FAIL: conform/POSIX2008/termios.h/conform
FAIL: conform/UNIX98/termios.h/conform
prlimit and prlimit64 have been added in the main <bits/resource.h>, but
not in the SPARC specific version. Fix that.
Note: this is Debian bug#703559, reported by Emilio Pozuelo Monfort
<pochu@debian.org>
If the fd refers to a terminal device, but not a pty master, the
TIOCGPTN ioctl returns with ENOTTY. This error is not caught, and the
possibly undefined buffer passed to ptsname_r is sent directly to the
stat64 syscall.
Fix this by using a fallback to the old method only if the TIOCGPTN
ioctl fails with EINVAL. This also fix the return value in that specific
case (it return ENOENT without this patch).
Also add tests to the ptsname_r function (and ptsname at the same time).
Note: this is Debian bug#741482, reported by Jakub Wilk <jwilk@debian.org>
This patch reduces duplication between different architectures'
kernel-features.h files by making the architecture-independent file
define various macros unconditionally (instead of only for a
particular list of architectures), with the architecture-specific
files then undefining the macros if necessary.
Specifically, __ASSUME_O_CLOEXEC (O_CLOEXEC flag to open) and
__ASSUME_SOCK_CLOEXEC (SOCK_NONBLOCK and SOCK_CLOEXEC flags to socket)
are supported on all architectures as of 2.6.32 or the minimum kernel
version for the architecture if later. For __ASSUME_IN_NONBLOCK,
__ASSUME_PIPE2, __ASSUME_EVENTFD2, __ASSUME_SIGNALFD4 and
__ASSUME_DUP3, the relevant syscalls were added for alpha in 2.6.33
but otherwise the features are available as of 2.6.32. For
__ASSUME_UTIMES, support is everywhere in 2.6.32 except for
asm-generic architectures and hppa.
Although those were the main cases of duplication among
kernel-features.h files, some other cases of unnecessary definitions
were also cleaned up: the hppa file defined various macros that were
either no longer used at all, or defined by the main file by default
anyway, the ia64 file had duplicative definitions of __ASSUME_PSELECT
and __ASSUME_PPOLL, while mips had such a definition of
__ASSUME_IPC64.
Really, rather than being defined in the main file then undefined for
asm-generic architectures, __ASSUME_UTIMES should become an
hppa-specific macro. Given that __ASSUME_ATFCTS and
__ASSUME_UTIMENSAT are now always true, the only live __ASSUME_UTIMES
conditional is in sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/utimes.c, which is not used
for asm-generic architectures. I think the desired state would be an
hppa-specific file (that includes sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/utimes.c if
__ASSUME_UTIMES, and otherwise has fallback code), with the fallback
code being removed from the main utimes.c. But I think that's most
reasonably a separate cleanup once __ASSUME_ATFCTS and
__ASSUME_UTIMESAT have both had conditional code cleaned up.
Given this patch, I think it's straightforward to move non-ex-ports
architectures to having their own kernel-features.h files, like
ex-ports architectures, rather than conditionals in the main file
(i.e., such a move won't require the architecture-specific file to
contain anything that isn't genuinely architecture-specific), and
would encourage architecture maintainers to do so.
Tested x86_64 that the installed shared libraries are unchanged by
this patch. Note that on some architectures this *will* cause
__ASSUME_* macros to be defined in cases where they weren't previously
but should have been (but this is just optimization, not a fix to a
user-visible bug, so doesn't need a bug report in Bugzilla).
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/kernel-features.h (__ASSUME_UTIMES):
Define unconditionally.
(__ASSUME_O_CLOEXEC): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SOCK_CLOEXEC): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_IN_NONBLOCK): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_PIPE2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_EVENTFD2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SIGNALFD4): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_DUP3): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_DUP3): Do not define.
(__ASSUME_EVENTFD2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_IN_NONBLOCK): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_O_CLOEXEC): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_PIPE2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SIGNALFD4): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SOCK_CLOEXEC): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_UTIMES): Undefine.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_UTIMES): Do not define.
(__ASSUME_O_CLOEXEC): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SOCK_CLOEXEC): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_IN_NONBLOCK): Undefine if [__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION <
0x020621] instead of defining if [__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >=
0x020621].
(__ASSUME_PIPE2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_EVENTFD2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SIGNALFD4): Likewise.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION < 0x020621] (__ASSUME_DUP3): Undefine.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/kernel-features.h (__ASSUME_UTIMES):
Do not define.
(__ASSUME_EVENTFD2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SIGNALFD4): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/hppa/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_32BITUIDS): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_TRUNCATE64_SYSCALL): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_IPC64): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_ST_INO_64_BIT): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_GETDENTS64_SYSCALL): Likewise.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION < 0x030e00] (__ASSUME_UTIMES): Undefine.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/ia64/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_UTIMES): Do not define.
(__ASSUME_PSELECT): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_PPOLL): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_O_CLOEXEC): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SOCK_CLOEXEC): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_IN_NONBLOCK): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_PIPE2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_EVENTFD2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SIGNALFD4): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_DUP3): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/m68k/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_UTIMES): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_O_CLOEXEC): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SOCK_CLOEXEC): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_IN_NONBLOCK): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_PIPE2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_EVENTFD2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SIGNALFD4): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_DUP3): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_UTIMES): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_O_CLOEXEC): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SOCK_CLOEXEC): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_IN_NONBLOCK): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_PIPE2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_EVENTFD2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SIGNALFD4): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_DUP3): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/kernel-features.h (__ASSUME_IPC64):
Likewise.
(__ASSUME_UTIMES): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_EVENTFD2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SIGNALFD4): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/tile/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_O_CLOEXEC): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SOCK_CLOEXEC): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_IN_NONBLOCK): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_PIPE2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_EVENTFD2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SIGNALFD4): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_DUP3): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_UTIMES): Undefine.
This patch cleans up some symbol versioning code in the ARM port that
exists only as relics of the old-ABI port, which was removed some time
ago.
The minimum symbol version in the ARM port is GLIBC_2.4 (the version
where the EABI port was introduced). Thus, any SHLIB_COMPAT
conditionals where the later version is 2.4 or later are obsolete and
can be removed. In addition, there is no need to set symbol versions
before 2.4 explicitly if the symbols would have a version of 2.4 by
default anyway. This includes most of the entries in
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/Versions: those for GLIBC_2.0 are for
libgcc unwind functions that aren't actually in ARM EABI glibc at all,
while those for GLIBC_2.2 and GLIBC_2.3.3 are for functions which for
the old-ABI port may have had versions different from the
architecture-independent default, but where for EABI the default
suffices (both the default and the version in that file map to 2.4, so
the entries in that file do nothing). The GLIBC_2.1 entries are
needed (architecture-specific functions), but it seems less confusing
for those to say GLIBC_2.4, as the actual version those symbols in
fact have.
Various cases in the <fenv.h> functions where a function is defined as
__fe* with an fe* versioned alias are cleaned up just to define fe*
directly, as done e.g. on AArch64. If in future we actually need an
__fe* name for use from C90 functions in libm as discussed recently,
of course we can add one on all architectures and make the fe* name
into a weak alias for that particular function, but for now the __fe*
names aren't needed.
In the case of posix_fadvise64, the __posix_fadvise64_l64 name and
posix_fadvise64 alias are kept as __posix_fadvise64_l64 is used in
posix_fadvise. (For that to be a namespace-clean use, posix_fadvise64
needs to be a *weak* alias not a strong one as at present, but that's
an independent preexisting bug.)
(There remain references to GLIBC_2_2 in
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/{msgctl.c,semctl.c,shmctl.c}. As those
files are used by alpha which has a genuine 2.2 version for those
functions, I think those references need to stay as-is.)
Tested that the disassembly of installed shared libraries is unchanged
by this patch (though function names shown in disassembly change to no
longer have @@GLIBC_2.4, now those functions get versioned only by the
version map and not redundantly at assembler time) and that the ABI
tests pass.
* sysdeps/arm/fclrexcpt.c (__feclearexcept): Rename to
feclearexcept. Remove symbol versioning code.
* sysdeps/arm/fegetenv.c (__fegetenv): Rename to fegetenv. Remove
symbol versioning code.
* sysdeps/arm/fesetenv.c (__fesetenv): Rename to fesetenv. Remove
symbol versioning code.
* sysdeps/arm/feupdateenv.c (__feupdateenv): Rename to
feupdateenv. Remove symbol versioning code.
* sysdeps/arm/fgetexcptflg.c (__fegetexceptflag): Rename to
fegetexceptflag. Remove symbol versioning code.
* sysdeps/arm/fsetexcptflg.c (__fesetexceptflag): Rename to
fesetexceptflag. Remove symbol versioning code.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/Versions (libc): Remove GLIBC_2.0,
GLIBC_2.2 and GLIBC_2.3.3 entries. Change GLIBC_2.1 to GLIBC_2.4.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/posix_fadvise64.c
(__posix_fadvise64_l32): Remove prototype.
[SHLIB_COMPAT(libc, GLIBC_2_2, GLIBC_2_3_3)]: Remove conditional
code.
This patch does some initial cleanup, following the move to 2.6.32
minimum kernel version, by removing __LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION
conditionals that are now always-true or always-false. In the case of
__ASSUME_ARG_MAX_STACK_BASED, where the conditional used a kernel
version that was itself in a macro, the associated sysconf.c code is
also cleaned up and __ASSUME_ARG_MAX_STACK_BASED removed completely.
Tested x86_64 that disassembly of installed shared libraries is
unchanged by the patch.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/kernel-features.h [__s390__]
(__ASSUME_UTIMES): Do not condition on kernel version.
(__ASSUME_PSELECT): Define unconditionally.
(__ASSUME_PPOLL): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_ATFCTS): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SET_ROBUST_LIST): Do not condition on kernel version.
(__ASSUME_COMPLETE_READV_WRITEV): Define unconditionally.
(__ASSUME_FUTEX_LOCK_PI): Do not condition on kernel version.
(__ASSUME_UTIMENSAT): Define unconditionally.
(__ASSUME_PRIVATE_FUTEX): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_FALLOCATE): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_O_CLOEXEC): Likewise.
(__LINUX_ARG_MAX_STACK_BASED_MIN_KERNEL): Remove.
(__ASSUME_ARG_MAX_STACK_BASED): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_ADJ_OFFSET_SS_READ): Define unconditionally.
(__ASSUME_SOCK_CLOEXEC): Do not condition on kernel version.
(__ASSUME_IN_NONBLOCK): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_PIPE2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_EVENTFD2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SIGNALFD4): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_DUP3): Likewise.
[__x86_64__ || __sparc__] (__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_FUTEX_CLOCK_REALTIME): Define unconditionally.
(__ASSUME_AT_RANDOM): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_PREADV): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_PWRITEV): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_REQUEUE_PI): Do not condition on kernel version.
(__ASSUME_F_GETOWN_EX): Define unconditionally.
(__ASSUME_XFS_RESTRICTED_CHOWN): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sysconf.c (__sysconf)
[!__ASSUME_ARG_MAX_STACK_BASED]: Remove conditional code.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_O_CLOEXEC): Define unconditionally.
(__ASSUME_PSELECT): Do not undefine conditionally.
(__ASSUME_PPOLL): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_ATFCTS): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SET_ROBUST_LIST): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_UTIMENSAT): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_FDATASYNC): Define unconditionally.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_SIGFRAME_V2): Likewise.
)__ASSUME_EVENTFD2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SIGNALFD4): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_PSELECT): Do not undefine conditionally.
(__ASSUME_PPOLL): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/ia64/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_PSELECT): Define unconditionally.
(__ASSUME_PPOLL): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_O_CLOEXEC): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SOCK_CLOEXEC): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_IN_NONBLOCK): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_PIPE2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_EVENTFD2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SIGNALFD4): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_DUP3): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/m68k/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_O_CLOEXEC): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SOCK_CLOEXEC): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_IN_NONBLOCK): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_PIPE2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_EVENTFD2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SIGNALFD4): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_DUP3): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_EVENTFD2): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SIGNALFD4): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL): Likewise.
lowlevellock.c for arm differs from the generic lowlevellock.c only in
insignificant ways, so can be removed. Happily, this fixes BZ 15119
(unnecessary busy loop in __lll_timedlock_wait on arm).
The notable differences between the arm and generic implementations are:
1) arm __lll_timedlock_wait has a fast path out if futex has been set
to 0 between since the function was called. This seems unlikely to
happen very often, so it seems at worst harmless to lose this fast
path.
2) Some function in arm's lowlevellock.c set futex to 2 if it was 1.
The generic version always sets the futex to 2. As futex can only be
0, 1 or 2 on entry into these functions, the behaviour is equivalent.
(If the futex manages to be 0 on entry then we've just lost another
unlikely fast path out.)
There are no test suite regressions.
Note that hppa and sparc also have their own lowlevellock.c. I believe
hppa can also be removed, so I'll send a separate patch for that
shortly. sparc's seems to be genuinely needed as it uses a different
locking structure.
Also note that the analysis at
https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-ports/2013-02/msg00021.html indicates a
further locking performance bug to fix - I've got a partial patch for
that which I can submit once I've finished testing.
2014-05-01 Bernard Ogden <bernie.ogden@linaro.org>
[BZ #15119]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/nptl/lowlevellock.c: Remove file.
This patch increases the minimum Linux kernel version for glibc to
2.6.32, as discussed in the thread starting at
<https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2014-01/msg00511.html>.
This patch just does the minimal change to arch_minimum_kernel
settings (and LIBC_LINUX_VERSION, which determines the minimum kernel
headers version, as it doesn't make sense for that to be older than
the minimum kernel that can be used at runtime). Followups would be
expected to do, roughly and not necessarily precisely in this order:
* Remove __LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION checks in kernel-features.h files
where those checks are always true / always false for kernels 2.6.32
and above.
* Otherwise simplify/improve conditionals in those files (for example,
where defining once in the main file then undefining in
architecture-specific files makes things clearer than having lots of
separate definitions of the same macro), possibly fixing in the
process cases where a macro should optimally have been defined for a
given architecture but wasn't. (In the review in preparation for
this version increase I checked what the right conditions should be
for all macros in the main kernel-features.h whose definitions there
would have been affected by the increase - but I only fixed that
subset of the issues found where --enable-kernel=2.6.32 would have
caused a kernel feature to be wrongly assumed to be present, not any
cases where a feature is not assumed but could be assumed.)
* Remove conditionals on __ASSUME_* where they can now be taken to be
always-true, and the definitions when the macros are only used in
Linux-specific files.
* Split more architectures out of the main kernel-features.h (like
ex-ports architectures), once various of the architecture
conditionals there have been eliminated so the new
architecture-specific files are no larger than actually necessary.
Tested x86_64.
2014-03-27 Joseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>
[BZ #9894]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/configure.ac (LIBC_LINUX_VERSION):
Change to 2.6.32.
(arch_minimum_kernel): Change all 2.6.16 settings to 2.6.32.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/configure: Regenerated.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/configure.ac: Remove file.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/configure: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/tile/configure.ac: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/tile/configure: Likewise.
* README: Update reference to required Linux kernel version.
* manual/install.texi (Linux): Update reference to required Linux
kernel headers version.
* INSTALL: Regenerated.
The current implementation of setcontext uses rt_sigreturn to restore
the contents of registers. This contrasts with the way most other
architectures implement setcontext:
powerpc64, mips, tile:
Call rt_sigreturn if context was created by a call to a signal handler,
otherwise restore in user code.
powerpc32:
Call swapcontext system call and don't call sigreturn or rt_sigreturn.
x86_64, sparc, hppa, sh, ia64, m68k, s390, arm:
Only support restoring "synchronous" contexts, that is contexts
created by getcontext, and restoring in user code and don't call
sigreturn or rt_sigreturn.
alpha:
Call sigreturn (but not rt_sigreturn) in all cases to do the restore.
The text of the setcontext manpage suggests that the requirement to be
able to restore a signal handler created context has been dropped from
SUSv2:
If the context was obtained by a call to a signal handler, then old
standard text says that "program execution continues with the program
instruction following the instruction interrupted by the signal".
However, this sentence was removed in SUSv2, and the present verdict
is "the result is unspecified".
Implementing setcontext by calling rt_sigreturn unconditionally causes
problems when used with sigaltstack as in BZ #16629. On this basis it
seems that aarch64 is broken and that new ports should only support
restoring contexts created with getcontext and do not need to call
rt_sigreturn at all.
This patch re-implements the aarch64 setcontext function to restore
the context in user code in a similar manner to x86_64 and other ports.
ChangeLog:
2014-04-17 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
[BZ #16629]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/setcontext.S (__setcontext):
Re-implement to restore registers in user code and avoid
rt_sigreturn system call.
[BZ #15215] This unifies various pthread_once architecture-specific
implementations which were using the same algorithm with slightly different
implementations. It also adds missing memory barriers that are required for
correctness.
This patch moves the __PTHREAD_SPINS definition to arch specific header
since pthread_mutex_t layout is also arch specific. This leads to no
need to defining __PTHREAD_MUTEX_HAVE_ELISION and thus removing of the
undefined compiler warning.
This patch makes the configure adds -D_CALL_ELF=1 when compiler does
not define _CALL_ELF (versions before powerpc64le support). It cleans
up compiler warnings on old compiler where _CALL_ELF is not defined
on powerpc64(be) builds.
It does by add a new config.make variable for configure-deduced
CPPFLAGS and accumulate into that (confix-extra-cppflags). It also
generalizes libc_extra_cflags so it accumulates in sysdeps configure
fragmenets.
This patch continues fixing __ASSUME_* issues in preparation for
moving to a 2.6.32 minimum kernel version by addressing assumptions on
robust mutex and PI futex support availability. Those assumptions are
bug 9894, but to be clear this patch does not address all the issues
from that bug about wrong version assumptions, only those still
applicable for --enable-kernel=2.6.32 or later (with the expectation
that the move to that minimum kernel will obsolete the other parts of
the bug). The patch is independent of
<https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2014-03/msg00585.html>, my other
pending-review patch preparing for the kernel version change; the two
together complete all the changes I believe are needed in preparation
regarding any macro in sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/kernel-features.h that
would be affected by such a change. (I have not checked the
correctness of macros whose conditions are unaffected by such a
change, or macros only defined in other kernel-features.h files.)
As discussed in that bug, robust mutexes and PI futexes need
futex_atomic_cmpxchg_inatomic to be implemented, in addition to
certain syscalls needed for robust mutexes (and
architecture-independent kernel pieces for all the features in
question). That is, as I understand it, they need
futex_atomic_cmpxchg_inatomic to *work* (not return an ENOSYS error).
The issues identified in my analysis relate to ARM, M68K, MicroBlaze,
MIPS and SPARC.
On ARM, whether futex_atomic_cmpxchg_inatomic works depends on the
kernel configuration. As of 3.13, the condition for *not* working is
CONFIG_CPU_USE_DOMAINS && CONFIG_SMP. As of 2.6.32 it was simply
CONFIG_SMP that meant the feature was not implemented. I don't know
if there are any circumstances in which we can say "we can assume a
userspace glibc binary built with these options will never run on a
kernel with the problematic configuration", but at least for now I'm
just undefining the relevant __ASSUME_* macros for ARM.
On M68K, two of the three macros are undefined for kernels before
3.10, but as far as I can see __ASSUME_FUTEX_LOCK_PI is in the same
group needing futex_atomic_cmpxchg_inatomic support and so should be
undefined as well.
On MicroBlaze the required support was added in 2.6.33.
On MIPS, the support depends on cpu_has_llsc in the kernel - that is,
actual hardware LL/SC support (GCC and glibc for MIPS GNU/Linux rely
on the instructions being supported in some way, but it may be kernel
emulation; futex_atomic_cmpxchg_inatomic doesn't work with that
emulation). The same condition as in GCC for indicating LL/SC support
may not be available is used for undefining the macros in glibc,
__mips == 1 || defined _MIPS_ARCH_R5900. (Maybe we could in fact
desupport MIPS processors without the hardware support in glibc.)
On SPARC, 32-bit kernels don't support futex_atomic_cmpxchg_inatomic;
__arch64__ || __sparc_v9__ is used as the condition for binaries that
won't run on 32-bit kernels.
This patch is not tested beyond the sanity check of an x86_64 build.
[BZ #9894]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/kernel-features.h
[__sparc__ && !__arch64__ && !__sparc_v9__]
(__ASSUME_SET_ROBUST_LIST): Do not define.
[__sparc__ && !__arch64__ && !__sparc_v9__]
(__ASSUME_FUTEX_LOCK_PI): Likewise.
[__sparc__ && !__arch64__ && !__sparc_v9__] (__ASSUME_REQUEUE_PI):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_FUTEX_LOCK_PI): Undefine.
(__ASSUME_REQUEUE_PI): Likewise.
(__ASSUME_SET_ROBUST_LIST): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/m68k/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION < 0x030a00] (__ASSUME_FUTEX_LOCK_PI):
Undefine.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION < 0x020621] (__ASSUME_FUTEX_LOCK_PI):
Likewise.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION < 0x020621] (__ASSUME_REQUEUE_PI):
Likewise.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION < 0x020621] (__ASSUME_SET_ROBUST_LIST):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/kernel-features.h
[__mips == 1 || _MIPS_ARCH_R5900] (__ASSUME_FUTEX_LOCK_PI):
Undefine.
[__mips == 1 || _MIPS_ARCH_R5900] (__ASSUME_REQUEUE_PI): Likewise.
[__mips == 1 || _MIPS_ARCH_R5900] (__ASSUME_SET_ROBUST_LIST):
Likewise.
Continuing the fixes for __ASSUME_* issues in preparation for moving
to a 2.6.32 minimum kernel version, this *untested* patch fixes bug
16648, the definition of __ASSUME_ATFCTS meaning that the futimesat
syscall is assumed for all MicroBlaze kernels despite not being
present until 2.6.33.
__ASSUME_ATFCTS controls conditionals relating to a lot of different
syscalls in Linux-specific code (fstatat64 faccessat fchmodat fchownat
futimesat newfstatat linkat mkdirat openat readlinkat renameat
symlinkat unlinkat mknodat), where whether newfstatat fstatat64
futimesat are used depends on the architecture, as well as controlling
whether openat64_not_cancel_3 is expected to work in
sysdeps/posix/getcwd.c. The assumptions are all OK as of 2.6.32
except for this MicroBlaze case, and it's generally desirable to get
rid of as many of the __ASSUME_ATFCTS conditionals as possible, to
simplify the code (the fallbacks include potential unbounded dynamic
stack allocations). Thus, rather than the simplest approach of
undefining __ASSUME_ATFCTS for older kernels on MicroBlaze, this patch
takes the approach of using the linux-generic implementation of
futimesat for MicroBlaze kernels before 2.6.33 (all such kernels have
the utimensat syscall).
[BZ #16648]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020621] (__ASSUME_FUTIMESAT): Define.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/futimesat.c: New file.
To reproduce:
# ip li add name dummy0 type dummy
# site_id=$(head -c6 /dev/urandom | od -tx2 -An | tr ' ' ':')
# for ((i = 0; i < 65536; i++)) do
> ip ad ad $(printf fd80$site_id::%04x $i)/128 dev dummy0
> done
# (ulimit -s 900; getent ahosts localhost)
# ip li de dummy0
This patch fixes -Wundef warnings related to the _ABI* macros on MIPS.
GCC predefines only the _ABI* macro related to the ABI actually in
use, meaning that a conditional such as "#if _MIPS_SIM == _ABI64" is
true only for the ABI in question (all the macros are nonzero), but
produces a -Wundef warning for the other ABIs. The normal approach to
using these macros is to include <sgidefs.h>, which ensures that all
three _ABI* macros are defined rather than just one; this patch does
so in the places that caused warnings (the bulk of the warnings
arising from <bits/wordsize.h>). Tested that the warnings are fixed.
* sysdeps/mips/bits/wordsize.h: Include <sgidefs.h>.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/getrlimit64.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/setrlimit64.c: Likewise.
Reviewing (for all architectures, with a baseline kernel version of
2.6.32) the kernel support for features for which __ASSUME_* macros
would be affected by a move to 2.6.32 as minimum kernel version showed
up that __ASSUME_PREADV and __ASSUME_PWRITEV were wrongly defined for
MicroBlaze (despite the corresponding syscall table entries not being
wired up in the kernel) and Alpha for 2.6.30 and above (although the
support on Alpha was added in 2.6.33). This patch makes the
kernel-features.h files undefine those macros for appropriate
versions.
[BZ #16649]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION < 0x020621] (__ASSUME_PREADV): Undefine.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION < 0x020621] (__ASSUME_PWRITEV): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_PREADV): Undefine.
(__ASSUME_PWRITEV): Likewise.
This comment appears to have been copied from the ARM port where it
makes more sense.
2014-03-18 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/sysdep.h: Remove
inaccurate comment.
Reviewing (for all architectures, with a baseline kernel version of
2.6.32) the kernel support for features for which __ASSUME_* macros
would be affected by a move to 2.6.32 as minimum kernel version showed
up that __ASSUME_PSELECT was wrongly defined for MicroBlaze, despite
the corresponding syscall table entry not being wired up in the
MicroBlaze kernel.
This patch makes the MicroBlaze kernel-features.h undefine
__ASSUME_PSELECT. I'd also encourage wiring it up in the kernel (so
you can then make this #undef conditional, and eventually obsolete
once a recent-enough kernel is required). I suspect it wasn't wired
up because of the mistaken comment in asm/unistd.h "obsolete ->
sys_pselect7" (there is no such syscall as pselect7).
[BZ #16642]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_PSELECT): Undefine.
The __ASSUME_UTIMES macro describes whether the utimes syscall is
present. For linux-generic architectures, it isn't (utimensat is
instead), so the macro should not be defined for them; this patch
removes the spurious definitions for such architectures. (Those
definitions don't actually cause any user-visible bug, because
futimes.c doesn't use __ASSUME_UTIMES if __ASSUME_UTIMENSAT is
defined, and futimesat.c and utimes.c are overridden for
linux-generic, but the definitions are still logically incorrect.)
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_UTIMES): Remove.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/tile/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_UTIMES): Likewise.
Similar to the issues for accept4 and recvmmsg, __ASSUME_SENDMMSG is
also confused about whether it relates to function availability or
socketcall operation availability, and the conditions for the
definition are always wrong (sendmmsg appeared in Linux kernel 3.0,
not 2.6.39); this is now bug 16611.
This patch splits the macro into separate macros like those for
accept4 and recvmmsg, defining them for appropriate kernel versions.
Tested x86_64, including that disassembly of the installed shared
libraries is unchanged by this patch.
[BZ #16611]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x030000 && __ASSUME_SOCKETCALL]
(__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SOCKETCALL): Define.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x030000 && (__i386__ || __x86_64__ ||
__powerpc__ || __sh__ || __sparc__)] (__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL):
Likewise.
[__i386__ || __powerpc__ || __sh__ || __sparc__]
(__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL_WITH_SOCKETCALL): Likewise.
[__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SOCKETCALL || __ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL]
(__ASSUME_SENDMMSG): Define instead of using previous
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020627] condition.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL): Define.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x030200] (__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x030000] (__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/ia64/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x030000] (__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/internal_sendmmsg.S [__ASSUME_SOCKETCALL
&& !__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL_WITH_SOCKETCALL &&
!__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL] (__NR_sendmmsg): Undefine.
[__ASSUME_SENDMMSG]: Change conditionals to
[__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SOCKETCALL].
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x030300] (__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL):
Define.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x030100] (__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/sendmmsg.c [__ASSUME_SOCKETCALL &&
!__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL_WITH_SOCKETCALL &&
!__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL] (__NR_sendmmsg): Undefine.
[!__ASSUME_SENDMMSG]: Change conditional to
[!__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SOCKETCALL].
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/tile/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x030000] (__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL):
Define.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/hppa/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x030100] (__ASSUME_SENDMMSG_SYSCALL):
Define.
Similar to the issues for accept4, __ASSUME_RECVMMSG is also confused
about whether it relates to function availability or socketcall
operation availability; this is now bug 16610.
Nothing actually tests __ASSUME_RECVMMSG for function availability,
but implicit in the definition in kernel-features.h is the idea that
it makes sense when the syscall is available and socketcall is not
being used. As with accept4, there are architectures where the
syscall was added later than the socketcall operation, meaning that
assuming glibc is built with recent enough kernel headers, it does not
attempt to use socketcall for these operations and __ASSUME_RECVMMSG
gets defined for kernels >= 2.6.33 even when the syscall was only
added later.
This patch splits the macro into separate macros like those used for
accept4; having similar macro structure in both cases (and for
sendmmsg once I've dealt with that) seems likely to be less confusing
than having a different structure on the basis of nothing actually
needing to assume the recvmmsg function works. Appropriate
definitions are added for all architectures.
Architecture-specific note: Tile's kernel-features.h says "TILE glibc
support starts with 2.6.36", which is accurate in that 2.6.36 was the
first kernel version with Tile support, and on that basis I've made
that header define __ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL unconditionally.
However, Tile's configure.ac has arch_minimum_kernel=2.6.32. Since
arch_minimum_kernel is meant to reflect only kernel.org kernel
versions, I think that should change to 2.6.36. (If using glibc with
kernel versions from before a port went in kernel.org, it's your
responsibility to change arch_minimum_kernel in a local patch, and at
the same time to adjust any __ASSUME_* definitions that may not be
correct for your older kernel; for developing the official glibc it
should only ever be necessary to consider what official kernel.org
releases support.)
Tested x86_64, including that disassembly of the installed shared
libraries is unchanged by this patch.
[BZ #16610]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020621 && __ASSUME_SOCKETCALL]
(__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SOCKETCALL): Define.
[(__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020621 && (__i386__ || __x86_64__ ||
__sparc__)) || (__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020625 && (__powerpc__
|| __sh__))] (__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL): Likewise.
[__i386__ || __sparc__]
(__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL_WITH_SOCKETCALL): Likewise.
[__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SOCKETCALL || __ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL]
(__ASSUME_RECVMMSG): Define instead of using previous
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020621] condition.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL): Define.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020621] (__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020621] (__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/ia64/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020621] (__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/internal_recvmmsg.S [__ASSUME_SOCKETCALL
&& !__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL_WITH_SOCKETCALL &&
!__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL] (__NR_recvmmsg): Undefine.
[__ASSUME_RECVMMSG]: Change condition to
[__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SOCKETCALL].
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020621] (__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL):
Define.
(__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL_WITH_SOCKETCALL): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020621] (__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/recvmmsg.c [__ASSUME_SOCKETCALL &&
!__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL_WITH_SOCKETCALL &&
!__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL] (__NR_recvmmsg): Undefine.
[!__ASSUME_RECVMMSG]: Change condition to
[!__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SOCKETCALL].
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/tile/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL): Define.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/hppa/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020622] (__ASSUME_RECVMMSG_SYSCALL):
Define.
In <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2013-12/msg00008.html>,
Aurelien noted issues with the definition of __ASSUME_ACCEPT4, which I
discussed in more detail in
<https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2013-12/msg00014.html>; these
are now bug 16609.
As previously noted, __ASSUME_ACCEPT4 is used in two ways:
* In OS-independent code, to mean "accept4 can be assumed to work
rather than fail with ENOSYS". It doesn't matter whether it's
implemented with socketcall or a separate syscall.
* In Linux-specific code, to mean "the socketcall multiplex syscall
can be assumed to handle the accept4 operation. When used in
Linux-specific code, it *never* refers to anything relating to the
accept4 syscall, only to the socketcall multiplexer.
This patch splits the macro into separate __ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SOCKETCALL,
__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL and __ASSUME_ACCEPT4 to clarify the different
cases involved. A macro __ASSUME_SOCKETCALL is added for convenience
in writing logic relating to all socketcall architectures. In
addition, to address the issue of architectures where socketcall
support for accept4 was added before a separate syscall was added (and
so the separate syscall should not be used unless known to be present
or fallback to socketcall is available), a fourth macro
__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL_WITH_SOCKETCALL is added to indicate that the
syscall became available at the same time as socketcall support. This
is then used in the relevant places in a conditional determining
whether to undefine __NR_accept4 (the simple approach to avoiding the
syscall's presence causing problems; I didn't try to implement runtime
fallback from the syscall to socketcall).
Architecture-specific note: alpha defined __ASSUME_ACCEPT4 for 2.6.33
and later, but actually the syscall was added for alpha in 3.2, so
this patch uses the correct condition for __ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL
there.
Tested x86_64, including that disassembly of the installed shared
libraries is unchanged by this patch.
[BZ #16609]
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/kernel-features.h [__i386__ ||
__powerpc__ || __s390__ || __sh__ || __sparc__]
(__ASSUME_SOCKETCALL): Define.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION && __ASSUME_SOCKETCALL]
(__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SOCKETCALL): Likewise.
[(__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x02061c && (__x86_64__ || __sparc__))
|| (__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020625 && (__powerpc__ ||
__sh__))] (__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL): Likewise.
[__sparc__] (__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL_WITH_SOCKETCALL): Likewise.
[__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SOCKETCALL || __ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL]
(__ASSUME_ACCEPT4): Define instead of using previous
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x02061c && (__i386__ || __x86_64__ ||
__powerpc__ || __sparc__ || __s390__)] condition.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_ACCEPT4): Change to __ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/accept4.c [__ASSUME_SOCKETCALL &&
!__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL_WITH_SOCKETCALL &&
!__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL] (__NR_accept4): Undefine.
[!__ASSUME_ACCEPT4]: Change condition to
[!__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SOCKETCALL].
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_ACCEPT4): Change to __ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL. Correct
condition to [__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x030200].
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020624] (__ASSUME_ACCEPT4): Change to
__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/i386/accept4.S [__ASSUME_ACCEPT4]:
Change conditions to [__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SOCKETCALL].
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/ia64/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x030300] (__ASSUME_ACCEPT4): Change to
__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/internal_accept4.S [__ASSUME_SOCKETCALL
&& !__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL_WITH_SOCKETCALL &&
!__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL] (__NR_accept4): Undefine.
[__ASSUME_ACCEPT4]: Change condition to
[__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SOCKETCALL].
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/m68k/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_SOCKETCALL): Define.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x02061c] (__ASSUME_ACCEPT4): Remove.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/microblaze/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_SOCKETCALL): Define.
(__ASSUME_ACCEPT4): Remove.
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020621] (__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL):
Define.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x02061f] (__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL):
Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/tile/kernel-features.h
(__ASSUME_ACCEPT4): Change to __ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/hppa/kernel-features.h
[__LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION >= 0x020622] (__ASSUME_ACCEPT4_SYSCALL):
Define.
This patch updates the ARM HWCAP data (both bits/hwcap.h and
dl-procinfo.[ch]) to match Linux 3.13.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/bits/hwcap.h (HWCAP_ARM_VFPD32): New
macro.
(HWCAP_ARM_LPAE): Likewise.
(HWCAP_ARM_EVTSTRM): Likewise.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/dl-procinfo.c (_dl_arm_cap_flags):
Add vpfd32, lpae and evtstrm.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/dl-procinfo.h (_DL_HWCAP_COUNT):
Increase to 22.
Also fixed the following whitespace nits to satisfy the push:
sysdeps/alpha/alphaev6/memset.S:142: space before tab in indent.
sysdeps/alpha/configure:1: new blank line at EOF.
sysdeps/alpha/fpu/e_sqrt.c:126: space before tab in indent.
sysdeps/alpha/preconfigure:1: new blank line at EOF.
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha/syscalls.list:1: new blank line at EOF.
This patch moves the AArch64 port to the main sysdeps hierarchy. The
move is essentially:
git mv ports/sysdeps/aarch64 sysdeps/aarch64
git mv ports/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64 sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64
The README is updated and I've updated ChangeLog.aarch64 along the
lines of the ARM move. The AArch64 build has been tested to confirm
that there were no changes in objdump -dr output or the shared
objects.
I've moved the MIPS port from ports to the main sysdeps hierarchy.
Beyond the README update, the move of the files was simply
git mv ports/sysdeps/mips sysdeps/mips
git mv ports/sysdeps/unix/mips sysdeps/unix/mips
git mv ports/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips
and in addition to the ChangeLog entries here, I put a note at the top
of ports/ChangeLog.mips similar to those in other files.
Tested that disassembly of installed shared libraries for mips is the
same before and after this patch (except for ld.so where paths in
assertions are involved, as for arm).
* sysdeps/mips: Move directory from ports/sysdeps/mips.
* sysdeps/unix/mips: Move directory from ports/sysdeps/unix/mips.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips: Move directory from
ports/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips.
* README: Update listing for mips-*-linux-gnu and
mips64-*-linux-gnu.
* sysdeps/mips: Move directory to ../sysdeps/mips.
* sysdeps/unix/mips: Move directory to ../sysdeps/unix/mips.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips: Move directory to
../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips.
I've moved the TILE-Gx and TILEPro ports to the main sysdeps hierarchy,
along with the linux-generic ports infrastructure. Beyond the README
update, the move was just
git mv ports/sysdeps/tile sysdeps/tile
git mv ports/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/tile \
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/tile
git mv ports/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/generic \
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/generic
I updated the relevant ChangeLogs along the lines of the ARM move
in commit c6bfe5c4d7 and tested the 64-bit tilegx build to confirm that
there were no changes in "objdump -dr" output in the shared objects.
This pulls in the latest defines for {g,s}etsockopt.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
Import the current list of defines available in the kernel headers.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
I've moved the ARM port from ports to the main sysdeps hierarchy.
Beyond the README update, the move of the files was simply
git mv ports/sysdeps/arm sysdeps/arm
git mv ports/sysdeps/unix/arm sysdeps/unix/arm
git mv ports/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm
and in addition to the ChangeLog entries here, I put a note at the top
of ports/ChangeLog.arm similar to that at the top of
ChangeLog.powerpc. There is deliberately no NEWS change, as I think
it makes the most sense to put in a general note above all ports
having moved if we can achieve that for 2.20.
Tested that disassembly of installed shared libraries for arm is the
same before and after this patch, except for data (not instructions)
in ld.so (there are assertions in sysdeps/arm/dl-machine.h, and the
path by which that file is found, and so by which it appears in the
assertion message, changes as a result of the move).
* sysdeps/arm: Move directory from ports/sysdeps/arm.
* sysdeps/unix/arm: Move directory from ports/sysdeps/unix/arm.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm: Move directory from
ports/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm.
* README: Update listing for arm-*-linux-gnueabi.
ports/ChangeLog.arm:
* sysdeps/arm: Move directory to ../sysdeps/arm.
* sysdeps/unix/arm: Move directory to ../sysdeps.arm.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm: Move directory to
../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm.
Support for /proc/self/task/$tid/comm as added in Linux 2.6.33,
therefore since the test tst-setgetname relies on this functionality
to operate we must skip the test in kernels < 2.6.33. We wrap the
checks with __ASSUME_PROC_PID_TASK_COMM such that in the future when
we move arch_minimum_kernel to 2.6.33 we can remove this code.